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First published online December 11, 2006
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/jcs.03239
Cell Science at a Glance |
Laboratory of Experimental Oncology and Radiobiology, Center for Experimental and Molecular Medicine, Academic Medical Center, Meibergdreef 9, 1105AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: j.p.medema{at}amc.nl)
| Introduction |
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| Expression of granzymes |
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| Extracellular substrates |
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| Granzyme delivery into the cytoplasm |
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| Intracellular substrates |
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Besides its Bcl-2-family-directed actions, granzyme B can process several caspases, including the effector caspase 3 and initiator caspase 8. The granzyme-B-mediated activation of caspase 3 is especially important in mice, in which Bid appears to be a weak substrate (Adrain et al., 2005
). Activation of caspase-3 is controlled by inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) family members, which are often over-expressed in tumour cells. For caspase 3 to be unleashed, IAPs need to be sequestered by Smac/Diablo or HtrA2/Omi, which are released from disrupted mitochondria (Trapani and Sutton, 2003
; Waterhouse et al., 2006
). Mitochondrial disruption may therefore be needed for this direct pathway as well; this notion is supported by the absence of active caspase 3 in granzyme-B/perforin-treated Bcl-2-overexpressing cells.
Granzyme B has also been reported to process several known caspase substrates directly, such as poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), ICAD, the nuclear mitotic apparatus protein (NuMa) and lamin B. Although most research has focused on the caspase-related pathways, granzyme B also induces caspase-independent events. For instance, membrane blebbing can be induced directly by cleavage of the Rho-regulated kinase Rock II, which is involved in actomyosin contraction, and this subsequently regulates bleb protrusion. Several other substrates unrelated to caspase-dependent death were recently identified in proteomic screening and these studies should help to complete the picture of granzyme-B-mediated killing (Adrain et al., 2005
; Bredemeyer et al., 2004
). A list of reported granzyme B substrates is given on the poster, but caution is warranted, because the vast majority have not been rigorously tested in physiologically relevant settings.
Granzyme A
Granzyme-A-induced cell death is mainly characterized by generation of single-stranded DNA nicks, rather than the oligonucleosomal DNA fragments typical of granzyme-B-induced apoptosis. Moreover, granzyme-A-induced death does not result in activation of caspases. Despite these differences, mitochondria are thought to fulfil a critical role in granzyme-A-mediated cell death. However, in contrast to granzyme B, granzyme A induces loss of mitochondrial inner membrane potential and the release of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Because the outer membrane stays intact, pro-apoptotic proteins such as cytochrome c, HtrA2/Omi or Smac/Diablo are not released. In response to ROS, the ER-associated SET complex, which includes SET, Ape1, pp32, HMG2, NM23-H1 and TREX1, translocates to the nucleus (Chowdhury et al., 2006
; Martinvalet et al., 2005
), where granzyme A cleaves three members of the SET complex that are involved in DNA repair: HMG2, Ape1 and SET (Lieberman and Fan, 2003
). More importantly, cleavage of SET releases the DNase NM23-H1 from its inhibitor and allows NM23-H1, together with TREX1, to nick DNA (Chowdhury et al., 2006
; Lieberman and Fan, 2003
).
Granzyme A also targets the nuclear lamins and histone H1 (Lieberman and Fan, 2003
). Because these proteins are important for stabilizing the nuclear envelope and maintaining chromatin structure, cleavage of these substrates probably facilitates the activity of DNases.
Granzyme C/H and granzyme K
Granzyme C/H and granzyme K are so-called orphan enzymes because their substrates have not been identified. Granzyme-C-induced cell death is independent of caspase activation (Johnson et al., 2003
) and the main feature of this pathway is thought to be rapid mitochondrial swelling and loss of mitochondrial membrane potential. Similarly to granzyme A, granzyme C induces single-stranded DNA nicks, but the DNase responsible for this effect has not yet been identified.
Granzyme K induces caspase-independent cell death (MacDonald et al., 1999
). Experiments performed with recombinant granzyme K also show ROS production, hinting at the possibility that the mechanism of action is similar to that of granzyme A.
Granzyme M
Granzyme-M-induced cell death occurs rapidly and in a caspase- and mitochondria-independent fashion (Kelly et al., 2004
). Cells treated with granzyme M display large cytoplasmic vacuoles, which may be indicative of autophagy, and show rapid plasma membrane permeabilization via an unknown mechanism. However, this view was recently contested following the identification of ICAD and PARP as potential substrates for granzyme M and clear signs of apoptosis when granzyme M was `protein-transfected' into target cells (Lu et al., 2006
). Moreover, granzyme M was suggested to regulate granzyme B activity by cleavage of the endogenous inhibitor PI-9 (see below). Which mechanism will hold up awaits further investigation, but it is clear that this granzyme uses alternative cleavage sites to cause cell death.
| Granzymes in disease |
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Besides impaired responses to viruses, mice lacking components of the granule-induced death mechanism are more prone to tumours. For instance, perforin-deficient mice develop spontaneous B-cell lymphomas and cannot control tumour growth in experimental settings (Catalfamo and Henkart, 2003
). The role of granzymes in tumour clearance is controversial and conflicting results have been reported that do or do not attribute a role of granzyme A and B in tumour clearance (Davis et al., 2001
; Pardo et al., 2002
; Smyth et al., 2003
).
Granule-mediated death thus forms an important defence mechanism against viruses and tumours, but escape mechanisms have been described. Several intracellular inhibitors of granzymes have been reported and some of these are encoded by the viruses or can be overexpressed in tumour cells (Silverman et al., 2004
; Trapani and Sutton, 2003
). The serpin class of serine protease inhibitors can render tumour and virus-infected cells immune to the actions of at least granzyme B and M in vitro (Bots et al., 2005
; Medema et al., 2001
), but inhibitors for the other granzymes are likely to exist. Whether this inhibition is effective in vivo is debated (Bots et al., 2006
), but it is clear that the plethora of cell death pathways induced by the different granzymes will in most cases act as `fail-safe' mechanisms that makes granule-induced death hard to beat.
| Acknowledgments |
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| References |
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